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What's New on Tubi This June

Not sure what you're in the mood for? This month makes it easy.

June's new arrivals on Tubi are all over the map, and that's exactly the point. Whether you're in the mood to sob over a love story that went sideways, root for a kid from South LA spelling her way onto a national stage, or watch two buddy cops blow up half of Miami, there's something here that fits tonight. A hopeless romantic replays 500 days of a relationship trying to figure out where it all went wrong. A group of overachieving high schoolers in the suburbs start making choices they can't take back. Keep scrolling , your pick is in here somewhere.

500 Days of Summer

Tom is a greeting card writer who believed Summer was his person, completely and without reservation. Then she ended it, and now he's doing what everyone does: going back through every moment trying to find the exact place it broke. The film jumps around in time the way a breakup actually lives in your brain, not start to finish, but by emotional weight, the good days and the bad ones crashing into each other. It's funny and then suddenly it isn't, and the ending will sit with you longer than you expect.

Akeelah and the Bee

Akeelah is eleven years old, goes to an underfunded school in South Los Angeles, and can spell words most adults have never seen. What she can't do yet is let herself want the Scripps National Spelling Bee out loud, because wanting something that big feels dangerous when you're not sure the world will meet you halfway. Her coach sees what she's capable of before she does. The competition scenes are genuinely tense, but the part that stays with you is watching Akeelah decide she's allowed to go for it. Bring snacks. You will cheer.

Better Luck Tomorrow

Ben is the kind of high school student who does everything right: perfect grades, extracurriculars, college prep on lock. He and his friends also run a small side operation selling cheat sheets, which turns into something bigger and darker almost before anyone notices the shift. Justin Lin directed this before the Fast & Furious franchise, and the restraint here is striking , it builds slowly, stays specific to its suburban California world, and ends somewhere you didn't see coming. One of the most underrated American films of the 2000s, and it's finally somewhere easy to find.

Bad Boys II

Mike Lowrey and Marcus Burnett are back, and this time the case runs from Miami all the way to Cuba, with an absolutely unhinged amount of car chases, explosions, and one-liners in between. Will Smith and Martin Lawrence are operating at peak chemistry here , the bickering feels real, the laughs land, and the action sequences are the kind of maximalist spectacle that Michael Bay was born to direct. It's two and a half hours and it earns most of them. Put it on when you want your living room to feel like a movie theater.

The 13th Warrior

Ahmad Ibn Fadlan did not ask to be here. An exiled ambassador from Baghdad, he gets swept up with a band of Norse warriors on their way to face something ancient and terrifying in the dark. He doesn't speak the language, doesn't know the customs, and is very clearly the wrong man for this mission. What follows is a genuinely atmospheric action-adventure that leans hard into fog, firelight, and dread. Antonio Banderas plays it completely straight and the film is better for it. If you've never seen this one, June is a good time to fix that.

Alien vs. Predator

A research team drills through Antarctic ice and finds a pyramid that shouldn't exist, built by a civilization that shouldn't have known about either species. Then the Aliens and Predators show up and the humans are immediately in the middle of something way above their pay grade. The creature design is committed, the setting is genuinely claustrophobic, and the film moves fast enough that you don't have time to overthink it. Sanaa Lathan leads with real presence. It's a Friday night creature feature that knows exactly what it is and delivers.

Appaloosa

Virgil Cole and Everett Hitch have been riding together long enough that they finish each other's sentences. They take jobs cleaning up lawless towns, and Appaloosa is their latest, run by a rancher named Bragg who killed the last marshal and hasn't lost any sleep over it. Then a widow rides in and complicates everything. Ed Harris directed and stars, Viggo Mortensen is his quiet, steady partner, and Renée Zellweger plays the widow with more going on beneath the surface than she lets on. A slow-burn Western with real character work underneath the gunplay.

Annie

Annie is ten, in foster care in New York City, and still absolutely convinced her parents are coming back for her. When a billionaire politician takes her in as a PR move, neither of them expects what happens next. Quvenzhané Wallis leads with so much warmth that the movie's optimism feels earned rather than forced. Jamie Foxx and Rose Byrne round out a cast that's clearly having a good time. The musical numbers are updated and fun, and the whole thing runs on the kind of uncomplicated joy that's genuinely hard to manufacture. Good for all ages, no exceptions.

Baby's Day Out

Three kidnappers grab a wealthy family's baby and immediately lose control of the situation in spectacular fashion. Baby Bink, meanwhile, is having the best day of his life, crawling through the city completely unbothered while the adults around him collapse into slapstick disaster. The baby is the straight man. That's the whole joke and it works every single time. It's pure 90s family comedy, broad, physical, and completely committed to the bit. If you grew up watching this one, it holds up better than you'd think. If you haven't seen it, prepare to laugh at grown men getting outsmarted by an infant.

The Angry Birds Movie 2

Red has finally earned his hero status on Bird Island, and he is not interested in sharing it , especially not with the pigs he spent the entire first movie fighting. But a new threat from a third island means the birds and pigs have to team up, and the film gets a lot of mileage out of how uncomfortable that is for everyone involved. The humor is faster and weirder than the first movie, the voice cast is stacked, and the subplot involving a trio of hatchlings on a heist is genuinely funny on its own. Solid pick for a family movie night with zero stress.

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